A qualitative study of the learning processes in young physicians treating suicidal patients. From insecurity to personal pattern knowledge and self-confidence
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/1149DOI
doi:10.1186/1472-6920-7-21Date
2007-07-06Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Background: Little empirical work has been done in studying learning processes among newly educated physicians in
the mental health field.
The aim of the study was to shed light on the meaning of newly educated physicians' lived experiences of learning
processes related to treating suicidal patients.
Methods: Thirteen newly educated physicians narrated their learning experiences while treating suicidal patients in their
own practice. The interview texts were transcribed and interpreted using a phenomenological-hermeneutical method
inspired by Ricoeur's philosophy.
Results: There was one main theme, four themes and eleven sub themes. The main theme was: Being in a transitional
learning process. The themes and sub themes were: Preparing for practice (Getting tools and training skills, Becoming
aware of one's own attitudes); Gaining experience from treating patients (Treating and following up patients over time,
Storing memories and recognizing similarities and differences in patients); Participating in the professional community
(Being an apprentice, Relating clinical stories and receiving feedback, Sharing emotions from clinical experiences,
Receiving support from peers); and Developing personal competence (Having unarticulated awareness, Having emotional
knowledge, Achieving self-confidence). The informants gave a detailed account of the learning process; from recognising
similarities and differences in patients they have treated, to accumulating pattern knowledge, which then contributed to
their personal feelings of competence and confidence. They described their personal competence with cognitive and
emotional elements consisting of both articulated and less articulated knowledge. The findings are interpreted in relation
to different learning theories that focus on both individual factors and the interaction with the learning environment.
Conclusion: This study provides additional information about learning experiences of young physicians during the
critical transition phase from medical school to early professional life. Peers are used for both learning and support and
might represent a more powerful resource in the learning process than previously recognized. Emotional experiences
do not seem to be adequately focused upon in supervision, which obviously has relevance both for learning and for the
well-being of young professionals. The study indicates some areas of the educational system that could profitably be
expanded including stimulating more systematically to critical reflection on and in practice, attention to feelings in the
reflective process and provision of more performance feedback to young physicians
Publisher
BioMed CentralCitation
BMC Medical Education 7(2007), article no 21 pp 10Metadata
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